Of the more than 400,000 U.S. service members killed in WWII, some 73,000 were never recovered or identified

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The remains of two WWII airmen will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, pictured here, on Sept. 19, 2013 -- nearly seven decades after their bomber plane went down in the mountains of modern day Papua New Guinea.

Updated at 11:17 PM PDT on Friday, Sep 13, 2013

Nearly seven decades after their bomber plane went down in modern day Papua New Guinea, two World War II U.S. servicemen are going to get a proper burial with full military honors, the U.S. Department of Defense announced this week.

Crew members of an A-20G Havoc bomber, the men were part of an eight-plane formation. Three of those planes went down in the storm.

They crashed in the mountains of a country known today as Papua New Guinea, according to the DOD. Last year, that crash site was excavated for a third time and the servicemen’s remains were recovered.

California native Pollard, who was 25 years old when he died, was survived by a pregnant young wife. They exchanged letters, detailing what life would be like when their child was born and Pollard was back home.

"He went missing March 13, 1944. I was born at the end of June," said Sandra Pollard, the couple's only child.

In 1946, Pollard’s brother gathered together a search party to scour the overgrown, rugged terrain where the airmen may have crashed.

“My mother said he was very gentle – he had a very gentle disposition,” Sandra Pollard said of her father. “My grandma said he was smart, interested in a lot of things. … And loved magic tricks.”

Now, 69 years after they perished, the fallen soldiers will be laid to rest on U.S. soil.

Still, a thermos, a tube of antibiotic ointment and shards of broken sunglasses survived the crash. Excavators found Licari’s dog tags, but Pollard’s were not recovered.

Pollard, pictured at right with his wife, and Licari will be buried as a group in a single casket on Sept. 19 at Arlington National Cemetery. The individually identified remains of Licari were buried Aug. 6 in his hometown of Frankfort, NY, the DOD said in a news release.

Sandra Pollard said she's "sorry" her mother died before she could have this closure. She plans to attend her father's funeral service in Washington, D.C., next month along with her half-sister, niece and grandson.

Of the more than 400,000 U.S. service members killed in WWII, some 73,000 were never recovered or identified, according to the DOD.